H Books
Related Subjects: Heart of Midlothian F.C. Hibernian F.C. Hamilton Academical F.C. Heriot Watt University
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Wonderful....Review Date: 2008-09-16
Review of TheFamily of EarthReview Date: 2007-05-22
BeautifulReview Date: 2004-07-21
Lovely Book, Baby Enjoys It!Review Date: 2007-01-01
The text is simple and poetic, but may be a bit lengthy for the board book audience. With my little one (16 months old), I find that I need to shorten the text on a couple of pages. (The way the text is written makes this easy to do. I just stop after the first sentence in a spot or two where it runs long for his taste.)
THE FAMILY OF EARTH has a political bent, and will likely be picked up by people with some liking for environmental messages. I would think this would be a safe gift book, though. The core message is that, "We all share the same earth." A fairly right-wing person I know read it and thought it "a bit odd," but was not offended.
My baby loves THE FAMILY OF EARTH. He is clearly interested in learning names of exotic animals and in looking at Schimmel's gorgeous pictures. THE FAMILY OF EARTH is one that he picks up and wnats me to read to him over and over.
Wonderful Book with an Important MessageReview Date: 2003-10-27

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Father to the Fatherless - The Charles Mully StoryReview Date: 2007-11-29
A BOOK FOR THE HEART OF THE RICH WESTReview Date: 2006-03-21
I think that the author, Peter Boge, must have listened well to Charles because Peter writes about the Mullis' life and ministry---its tragic experiences and miraculous interventions---with vivid, fast-paced, what's-going-to-happen-next intensity. (I read the book in a day.) If you wonder if the supernatural, "power-encounter" presence of the Spirit is still operative today, the Charles Mulli story is for you.
Orphans in Africa, particularly Kenya, and what can be done and what is being done about and for them is the passion and burden of the book. Charles Mulli is one man, chosen by God, to bring "the kingdom of God" to the orphans. Out of the most desperate beginnings of a young boy's life, God shapes a man with a fierce vision and fiery compassion for "the street children" of Kenya. You will be intrigued by MCF--Mulli Children's Family, the name of Charles' multi-faceted ministry.
Charles Mulli's definition of "prosperity" is worth the price of the book and the time it takes you to read it. It's like no definition you've ever read.
God's graceReview Date: 2005-12-21
An inspiration and a challengeReview Date: 2005-11-17
Awe Inspiring Story of FaithReview Date: 2005-11-24

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Yes, yes, yes (you must read this)...Review Date: 2008-07-27
sacrifice and lossReview Date: 2008-02-07
I interpret this as meaning that on the one hand, we may find ourselves breaking our own laws to follow what we believe. For if you are pursuing something worth pursuing, and it happens to run beyond the law, are you going to abandon the chase?
But it is easy to break laws, and hard to break hearts (at least, that is, you must be hard to do so). And so doing the right thing in regards to your ethical understanding of action can lead you to sacrifice the mutual faith that you have with other people. In some ways, this is what Isaac confronts. The man on the way home sure of a steak dinner isn't a knight of faith--he is at best a pawn. Abraham too is not impressive here. What Isaac gave up was, so I have come to think after years of thought on the matter, much more weighty. He went up the mountain with faith in his father and in God; he was forced to sacrifice one to maintain the other. We will never know which. And that is the nature of love in a world in which doing the right thing is sure to involve breaking SOMEONE's law. [17]
and isaac cried out, "if i have no father on earth, then youReview Date: 2005-02-20
Theological Tour de ForceReview Date: 2005-10-26
'Fear and Trembling' presents a very penetrating, and ultimately disturbing, investigation into the personal and 'existential' implications of the religious concept of faith, as illustrated by the story of Isaac's sacrifice in Genesis 22.
Reviewers like to analyse the text either in respect to the biography of Kierkegaard, or of his literary output (or in relation to the other book in this collect, 'Repetition'), which are fair enough, but nevertheless, this book stands on its own with the question of whether religious faith can be a 'teleological suspension of the ethical.' This sounds like it could be a tendious philosophical excercise, but his erudition and literary skill constantly defies ones attempt to reduce or domesticate the paradoxes which he throws forward to his reader. The text still today offers each reader a choice of his own.
Was Kierkegaard a "Knight of faith"?Review Date: 2001-03-31
The different takes of the Abraham story, remind me of Rabbinical midrash. The four different accounts did not happen, but they might have. It is a way of stretching the story, and a way to introduce his "faith by virtue of the absurd". The tragic hero remains in the ethical, but Abraham is different that this, and is related to the Absolute. Very thought provoking!

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The Loaded Gun WhichReview Date: 2004-02-07
more importantly . . . all that white witchcraft still dazzles
For those whose aquiantance with the Belle of Amherst is limited to the classroom edition - i.e., There is no Frigate Like a Book, et al., look again. Dickenson really is the epitome of the rugged individualist - a free spirit - in ways surprisingly opposed to her contemporary, Whitman, she arrives at similar conclusions going no further than her garden. She is the inward sojourner - at home in the harshest tensions and conflicts of the psyche - where her distinctly feminine sensitivity speaks truth in "slant" - as she qualifies her enormous insight.
Most haunting: 'Success is counted sweetest', 'To learn the Transport by the Pain', 'My life closed twice before its close', and, "My Life had stood - a Loaded Gun -". Dickenson laments our sovereign anguish, our exile from the immediate truth or the comprehensive immediacy of truth, the quest for which her poems articulate an urgent hunger enveloped in alternately the most naturistically ambient references or stonily direct terms.
Best collection of Emily Dickinson's poemsReview Date: 2008-06-21
The special value of a volume of this kind Review Date: 2006-01-15
This present volume edited by the dean of Dickinson scholars purports to choose of the total oeuvre the very best of her work.
I truly appreciate this as a volume of this kind can extend my knowledge and appreciation of her poetry in a way which is most economical and helpful to me.
Strong MedicineReview Date: 2002-01-10
Perhaps we are looking at the wrong aspects...Review Date: 2002-07-30
This is, of course, an abridged collection. As such, we are forced to rely on the opinion of another. Granted this is common enough with poetry collections, but that doesn't change the very nature of each person having differing interests. There is no way to know if the ones he leaves out are just as good or even better, from each individuals perspective, without going to more comprehensive texts.
Regardless, I do have one gripe with this book that is unrelated to the above pettiness. The method of dating each poem seems silly to me. The reason is that they are all claimed to be from one of several (if memory serves 3) years separated out over several decades. That and there are two listings of dates for each poem, which I don't recall off hand why they did that, and it may serve some purpose, but it's not useful information if when these poems were written can only be pinned down to plus or minus five-ten years. I can't blame Johnson for this as I imagine that is as close as is known, but, by the same token, the dates could have been left out so that it doesn't detract from the actual poetry.
All in all I would recomend this book, but I might suggest getting a more complete version instead (so long as it is unedited--Emily hated it when people wanted to edit her poems, and I think that we should respect that).

PerfectReview Date: 2008-08-01
Extremely Helpful GuideReview Date: 2007-01-12
Very helpful for anyone taking prescription medsReview Date: 2007-10-22
Med-interactionsReview Date: 2007-03-08
Awesome Pocket Book Guide - Great for those in DieteticsReview Date: 2007-10-13
1. Alternative Name(s)
2. The drug's affect
3. Diet (with our without food), what foods to avoid with the med (ie. grapefruit)
4. Oral/GI affects
5. S/Conds
6. Affects on Pregnancy
7. Blood/Serum affects
8. Urinary affects
9. What to monitor
10. Ways to be adminstered (the drug)
11. and more
Additionally, the book provides (what I find to be very useful) are Lab Values, their normal ranges, and reasons why they might be elevated or below normal limits.
There is more within this pocket guide.
The only thing I don't like is that it says "Pocket Guide"; it's not really that small, it's quite big. Don't expect it to fit in your pant pocket. It will fit in your lab coat pocket, but it's quite still big. I suggest to carry it with your binder. Just don't misplace it; I've done it many times already on the different hospital floors.
I highly recommend this food and drug medication guide -- especially those in the dietetics profession.

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A Madman RevealedReview Date: 2003-12-24
For the Love of a MadmanReview Date: 2003-11-04
An extraordinary find by Kim Fracassi New York, New YorkReview Date: 2003-06-19
A thought provoking novelReview Date: 2003-05-19
An unique perspectiveReview Date: 2003-05-09

For people seeking to program Fractals or ChaosReview Date: 2002-03-27
Short, packed with information, math backround neededReview Date: 2006-05-03
First, review your math: number systems, mods, logarithms, trigonometry, functions.
Second, prepare yourself for a book that is packed with information in each line. Don't expect even a line skip unnecessary.
Third, if you want to make a full use of book, don't read it and put it aside. You have to bear with the author and work out the examples. These two facts, combined with your willing to analyze the code algorithms will make you learn the fractals -relatively- deeply.
The bonus fact is that the authour explains how to create your own fractals in the last chapter.
As "the cons" I can say that the turbo basic programs are outdated. They need a good revision, possibly a port to C, Java (or maybe Ruby for the fans). In my opinion, a clean C code would do the trick.
Finally here is the chapter list:
i. Preface
ii. Acknowledgements
iii. Introduction
1. Counting and Number Systems
2. Numbers and Points
3. Meanders and Fractals
4. Spirals, Trees and Stars
5. The Analysis of a Fractal
6. Chance in Fractals
7. Poincare, Julia, Mandelbrot
8. Making Your Own Fractals
Appendix A. Complex Numbers
Appendix B. Programs
Bibliography
Index
A Classic of FractalsReview Date: 2001-07-29
A Excellent Introduction to FractalsReview Date: 2001-06-21
However, this somewhat dated volume needs a revision to upgrade the code from Basic to, say, Java. When the book was first published, microcomputers were relatively weak. Consequently, the book makes a few digressions into some rather involved algorithms designed to minimize memory use. Of course, today's machines are much more powerful. It is a lot simpler to use recursion (although this uses up memory liberally) in the fractal programs.
Finally, I think that the geometry could be made conceptually cleaner by mentioning that a general similitude (of which a contraction mapping is one example) on the plane can be written as a composition of rotations, translations, reflections, and scalings.
For more substantial treatments of fractals that don't demand too much math background, see "Fractals Everywhere" by M. Barnsley and "Introduction to Fractals and Chaos" by R. Crownover. However, one should read Lauwerier's slim and elegant volume before and after studying these more advanced works--before, as an introduction, and after, as a delightful summary and "bird's eye view" of the subject.
Very nice book...short but packed full of informationReview Date: 1999-10-19

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CulminationReview Date: 2008-06-29
Excellent Book Review Date: 2005-04-08
Just what I neededReview Date: 2004-02-04
There are two things that make this book really great.
1) The teaching style. Besides having a wonderful
way with words, the author uses plenty of subtle teaching principles that help in the understanding of the material like frequent
repetition of the main concepts and slowly building up examples over different sections inside each chapter.
2) Content !!!! Its hard to assimilate abstract material like estimation theory without at the end having some type of useful application or algorithm to show for. The author's examples and computer projects on channel estimation, channel equalization, maximum ratio combining and Rake receivers are very popular building blocks for a variety of modems. It is very motivating to know that after labouring through the chapter the authors feels that you are now ready to understand decision feedback equalizers and so he presents you with a nice DFE computer project.
Difficult topics require competent teaching approaches and that is exactly what you will find in this book.
The only thing that would make this book even better would be a very brief introductory chapter on statistics and linear algebra. So if you are going through the book and you want to quickly revisit the definition of covariance or hermetian transpose there is one centralized section that has all the useful mathematical tools nicely listed.
As
a practising engineer, I highly recommend this book.
Andreas S.
ExcellentReview Date: 2004-03-24
A True MasterpieceReview Date: 2003-10-06
Collectible price: $27.42

Classic JokerReview Date: 2004-03-30
A bit uneven, but definitely worth the readReview Date: 2003-04-26
The quality of the stories is uneven, ranging from brilliant to forgettable. Unfortunately, the very best stories are all weighted toward the first part of the book and sets you up thinking that ALL of the stories will be that good. My favorites are "The Man Who Laughs" and "On a Beautiful Summer's Day, He Was." The latter, while being the least "Joker"-y of the lot, is also the most disturbing. "On the Wire" is also excellent, and although "Jangletown" falls into the average group, it's memorable for its description of the Joker (which brought shadows of Grant Morrison's Arkham Asylum) and the hints at pederasty. Most of the others are average but still entertaining and full of dark, disturbing moments (Bruce Wayne's punchline in "Dying is Easy, Comedy is Hard," the opening of "Bone," and the patricide in "Best of All"). The only story I flat out didn't like was "The Joker's Christmas."
I thought it was an excellent decision to use horror writers for the most part to bring The Joker to life...I can't imagine a genre he more belongs at home in.
Do yourself a favor a grab a copy of this book. It's truly unsettling.
Wonderful Joker storiesReview Date: 2001-11-27
I would recomend this to any Batman fan, any comic fan, or anyone looking for good short stories.
Terrifying.Review Date: 1999-06-14
A Damn Good BookReview Date: 2001-03-21

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The key to unlocking depression is in this book!Review Date: 2002-09-30
Most Informative Ever!Review Date: 2001-05-13
The most helpful book on depression I have ever readReview Date: 2004-12-26
getting yuor life back: the complete guide to recovery from depresionReview Date: 2006-07-19
Very helpful and action-orientedReview Date: 2002-01-03
Like another reviewer, I was also surprised by the Publisher's Weekly review posted above and disagree with much of the author's assessment of the book. If you are depressed and feel like you've been going around in circles about daily issues like paying the bills or larger issues about finding meaning in the life you lead, this book might also help you find a way to assess your situation and begin to relieve symptoms of depression. While no book is a cure and any approach to addressing depression requires a strong personal commitment, the authors of this book have really helped me, someone who has suffered from depression for more than 10 years. I thank them very much.
Related Subjects: Heart of Midlothian F.C. Hibernian F.C. Hamilton Academical F.C. Heriot Watt University
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The Art is just Wonderful.